Against the backdrop of smoldering tensions over race and policing in Toronto and Thunder Bay, Ont., trainers and educators who specialize in anti-racism efforts caution that cultural sensitivity training for police officers is no quick fix.

“Our use of stereotypes is an unconscious habit. Like any habit, it’s hard to break,” said Shakil Choudhury, a Toronto-based consultant who has lead diversity training for about 25 years.

“You’re not going to break the habit after one training [session],”

Police in Thunder Bay are under intense scrutiny over their interactions with Indigenous people, after two separate reports released this week suggested the police service in the northern Ontario city is rife with institutional racism.

The reports advised that both police officers and the civilian board, which oversees the police service, undertake cultural sensitivity training about Indigenous peoples.

The reports didn’t surprise Choudhury, who has conducted diversity training for several police forces in Ontario and Alberta.

In a report released Wednesday, Ontario’s independent police watchdog Gerry McNeilly said that there’s a ‘crisis of trust’ between police and Thunder Bay’s Indigenous community. (Matt Prokopchuk/CBC)

He says systemic racism is “pervasive” in policing and the criminal justice system in Canada, and it takes time and commitment from leadership to root it out.

“Like any other lesson we learned in school — whether it was math, learning to read, or write — it took repetition … It took a teacher to help us work through our mistakes,” he said.

“Equally, that’s how you’re going to undo unconscious bias.”

However, some anti-racism educators question the effectiveness of unconscious bias training.

According to Carl James, a York University professor who has published several reports about anti-black racism in education, research suggests that unconscious bias training hasn’t produced desired results.

“We have heard over and over again that the police have had training. So the question is, why hasn’t it produced anything different?”

‘A hidden form of prejudice’

The problem, according to James, is a resistance to mandatory training.

“When people reluctantly sit in the place and are … given training, one would wonder how willing are they to really engage, in a deep way of thinking, through what ought to be dealt with,” said James.

Choudhury, who has also trained teachers and health professionals, acknowledges participants in anti-racism workshops often feel defensive, “because they’re basically waiting to be told that they’re bad, they’re wrong and they’re racist,” he said.

[Unconscious bias] is part of the human condition, and you can be trained to uncover it.– Shakil Choudhury

Choudhury tries to avoid the blame-game by explaining unconscious bias, which he describes as “a hidden form of prejudice.”

“You don’t have bias because you’re a bad person,” he said. “We’ve all been socialized in a system in which criminality and danger has been associated with the darkness of one’s skin. That is an incorrect assumption, yet it is pervasive,” said Choudhury.

Unconscious bias training programs, which are designed to expose people to deeply ingrained stereotypes they hold about everything from race to gender, have been rolled out to police forces across Canada and the United States.

Toronto Police came under scrutiny this week when a report from the Ontario Human Rights Commission found that a black person in Toronto is 20 times more likely than a white person to be shot by police. (Christopher Langenzarde/CBC)

Choudhury believes it’s also important to teach emotional intelligence skills to police.

“Police officers very much feel highly criticized, and rightfully so … But this [unconscious bias] is part of the human condition, and you can be trained to uncover it,” says Choudhury.

But training for individual officers won’t work, James suggests, unless the entire culture of an organization is examined for bias.

“One of the benefits might be a nice conversation — but a conversation toward what? Is it going to produce the changes necessary to provide a more effective organization that works with the community in less discriminatory ways?”

Policing solutions in Saskatoon

Lagimodiere led Indigenous awareness training for Saskatoon police in 2002 and 2003, after the practice of “starlight tours” — where officers would abandon Indigenous men, perceived as troublemakers, on the outskirts of town in the dead of winter — was exposed.

John Lagimodiere is the publisher/editor of Eagle Feather News. (Submitted by John Lagimodiere)

Police were taught Indigenous history, treaties, the Indian Act, and residential schools. Elders were invited to offer cultural teachings.

“All of Canada got robbed of the proper education about Aboriginal people,” said Lagimodiere.

“It’s not their [police officer’s] fault they don’t know. It’s not their fault it’s those perceptions and biases are in there, because they’re born into them.”

Lagimodiere recalls police responding positively, including one memorable follow-up with a long-serving sergeant.

“He said, ‘That two days I spent with you changed the entire way I police,'” said Lagimodiere.

In the past decade, Saskatoon police have hired more Indigenous members and offered compulsory diversity training. The Saskatoon police chief began holding annual meetings with Indigenous elders. Police also helped erect a memorial to missing and murdered Indigenous women in front of police headquarters.

But Lagimodiere says the key changes need to be on the street.

“A lot of these guys [police officers] don’t know where this pain in the community comes from,” said Lagimodiere, who teaches police officers to approach Indigenous people they’re investigating differently.

“If you can talk to them in a good way, without blaming these dudes … once they have a better perspective on it, things get better relationship-wise.”

Please Kindly Subscribe To Our Weekly Updates

Name

Email

We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, revised Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
click here